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Chicago examiner sunday Chicago june 12 1910 sunday f this edition consists of m vlji'it i news 7 drama fe'iv iwlh 2 foreign b want aus Â£Â»*\| fvij news poi-ii.aritv k Â»â€¢ f 53 s automobiles contest _*, 71 v*x 4 sporting 9 reae estate v j v 1 i 0 city life markets }â– â€¢ 'â– # v â€ž society financial lw *__ 6 editorial 10 magazine jwf 3iusic li comic l^j registered in o s patent office price five cents wgl Chicago and vicinity partiy a w cloudy sunday monday fair with %- j v 1 rising temperature light variable j'uj i â€¢ nt i winds aw vol x no 50 a m pinchot assails tariff as fruit of business in politics intended as means to raise wages it has become tool to lift cost of living â– a snake we must kill Â» so he terms alliance of inter ests with lawmakers in speech at st paul st pat7i minn june 11 congress was attacked as a tool of the industrial interests a body which had sold out to corporations and in turn hound over th people and their resources to monopolistic control by gilford rinohot in a speech be fore the st paul roosevelt club to-night the tariff as attacked as the means â€¢ taken to bind the people and hand them over to the corporations tinder the cry of promoting national protection mr pinchot said in part the conservation issue is a moral is sue and the heart of it is this for whose benefit shall our natural resources lie conserved for the benefit of us all or for the use and profit of the few all monopoly rests on the unregulated control of natural resources and natural nd â€¢ vantages and such control by the special interests is impossible without the help of lcs the alliance between business politics is ihe most dangerous thing ir political life it is the snake that iust kill defence in congress lost cause the special interests are in poll we as a nation have lost confidence jngress this is a serious statement jke but it is true it does not apply turse to the men who reallv repre their constituents and who are mak o fine a tight for the conservation of overnment as soon as these men won their battle and consolidated victory confidence in congress will t in the meantime the people of the i states believe that as a whole the ; and the house no longer represent iters by whom they were elected but pecial interests by whom they are illed they believe so because they so often seen congress reject what wple desire and do instead what the sts demand and of this there could better illusti tion than the tariff e tariff under the policy of protee was originally a means to raise the f wages it has been made a tool to | se the cost of living the wool i ale professing to protect the wool-j r is found to result in sacrificing r and consumer alike to oue of the rapacious of trusts e cotton cloth schedule was increased e face of the uncontradicted public lony of the manufacturers themselves t ought to remain unchanged e steel interests by a trick secured idefensible increase in the tariff on ural steel * ar trust a thief yet protected ie sugar trust stole from the govern like a petty thief yet congress by s of a dishonest schedule continues oteet it in bleeding the public ho is to blame because representa of the people are so commonly led to y their trusts we all are we who not taken the trouble to resent and in end to the knavery we knew was on the brand of politics served Â» us by the professional politician has been composed largely of hot meals ie interests and hot air for the people ve have all known it ie of the most significant facts of the is that the professional politicians ir to be wholly unaware of the great i change which has come over politl linking in the last decade they fail i that the political dogmas the politi logans and the political methods of last generation have lost their po*w sr that our people have come at last age of politics by the eternal rules of and wrong erests must get out ie overshadowing question before the lean people to-dÂ»y is this shall the n govern itself or shall the interests this country the one great political nd underlying all others giving mean ing to all others is this the special inter ests must got out of politics the old style leaders seeking to switch public attentlou av.-ay from this one absorbing and over whelming issue are pitifully ridiculous and out of date to trj to divert the march ot an aroused public conscience from this l'ighteot:s inevitable conflict by means of obsolete political catchwords is like trying to dam the mississippi with dead leaves to drive the special interests out of poli tics is n vast undertaking for iu politics lies their strength if they resist as doubt less thev will it will call for nerve endur ance and sacrifice ou the part of the peo ple it will lie no child's play for the power of privilege is great but the power of our people is greater still and their steadfastness is equal to the need the task is a tremendous one with in the de mands it will make and the rewards it will bring it must be undertaken s.iberly car ried out firmly and justly and relentlessly followed to the very end two things alone can bring success the first is hon esty in public men without which no pop ular government cau long succeed the mond is complete publicity of all tho affairs in which the public has an interest such as the business cf corporations and political expenses during campaigns and be tween them the struggle will be bitter and long but it will be well worth all it 111 cost for self-government is at stake f â– adeline genee adeline genee weds isitt dukes adviser _ _ queen mother alexandra sends diamond brooch as pres ent to the bride london june 11 adeline genee the dancer who returned only recently from her second tour of america was married at all saints church margaret street to day to frank s x isitt legal adviser to the duke of newcastle the rev m r carpenter rector of all saints officiated the duke gave the bride away the nuptials were witnessed by many persons including some well known in so ciety and prominent members of the theat rical profession the queen mother alexandra sent the bride a diamond brooch gift from play company there were many gifts some of them from the united states the silver star company sent a case of fourteen large sil ver dishes and the members of the dancer's j company who accompanied her from lon don on her last tour contributed a four foot mirror framed in massive silver mrs halley fiske gave a table service of cut glass and marc klaw a case of tif 1 fany liquor glasses christine xllssou the bridegroom's godmother a diamond and emerald scarfpin the dowager duchess of newcastle a massive coffee service and the duchess of somerset an antique gold box mr isitt has been a romantic wooer he is middle aged and spectacled and as at torney the interest of many titled clients were intrusted to him he subordinated them all to the sprightly dancer ttud for three years devoted himself to her followed her to america in london be attended â– every perform 1 ance at which she appeared during longj engagements and when she went to the united states he let his law practice drop to follow her ... ,â– - â€¢ i it has been reported that the duke of newcastle will settle a large sum of money on her so that she may have a fortune in her own right and be independent of the stage one condition of the marriage seems to be that she need not desert the stage un-j less personally so inclined under thatj arrangement mr isitt consented to the renewal of certain contracts she wished to make for the coming season 5th wedding for couple t'liit-a_oau and av ire uivorred four j times and heiuarrieil san francisco june 11 j pay for the weddings and my wife pays for the divorces says - morris - lewis â– a local haberdasher twenty-five years old whose wife has ihe divorce habit four times in six years morris lewis and mrs hannah colin lewis of Chicago have beep married and fonr times the courts of Chicago and the rabbis have divorced them ' now mrs lewis is buying her fifth trous seau getting ready for her fifth honey moon with morris tp follow the wedding in july while the last divorce papers are not four mouths old yet â€¢-â€¢â– â– - kaiser dines chicagoans miss mec'leiiunii kecovering from operation for appendicitis berlin june 11 miss mcclenn an the i singer of Chicago is recovering from an operation for appendicitis among the i kaiser's dinner guests recently were mrs | francis l.eggett of new york and miss i nicoleue zedeler the Chicago violinist i who has been engaged by sousa as his | principal soloist on n world tour which will begin in september miss zedeler - hns been in charge of the musical education of the children of several dlsting u berlin families she has played before the â– imperial family and the kaiser has highly i complimented her meat prices up cent a pound to-morrow general advance scheduled for Chicago new york and other cities new famine threatened scarcity of steers and the high â€¢ cost of fodder are given as reasons wholesale and retail prices of meat in Chicago new york and throughout the ' large cities of the east will be advanced one cent to-morrow according to news made public vesterday through well-in \ formed sources the result will be that thousands of peo ple will be forced to abstain and that scores of retail dealers will be forced to give up business or do business at a loss ' scarcity of good beef steers the fact that corn and cotton seed used for fattening are high and that the packers must main tain their margin of profit are assigned as reasons for the new increase price of beef on hoof rises beef on the hoof went up 2o cents a hundredweight in the Chicago market dur ing the week just ended the packers say this makes an increase in wholesale prices imperative in new york where announcement had been mace of an increase from 12c to 18c a pound in the wholesale price a resump tion of the meat riots of six weeks ago is expected fourteen cent beef will be the highest experienced ln new york's history a dispatch from there last nfght said it will be a cent higher than it was when the great public clamor arose against lis price about six weeks ago when hun dreds of thousands of people all over the united states abstained from its use to such an extent that it fell to 11 cents a pound ruin feared by dealers then the agitation ceased and after about four weeks at the 11-cent rate the trust again started to raise the price to the retail butcher adding a fraction of a cent occasionally so that the increases grew al most imperceptibly nntil this week when the 11-cent figure was again attained butchers say that the raise must drive scores if not hundreds of small new york dealers ont of business airship scatters rats hotel la salle woman guest loses coiffure in candy model a woman's shriek accompanied by flying rats puffs hair pins and the remnants of an automobile veil sent high into the air startled guests sitting in the lobby of the hotel la salle last night the turmoil was occasioned by the curiosity of mrs r l streeter a guest from pittsburg who looked too closely into the mechanism of a model air ship that chef laperrique had made out of candy and set up to be run by electricity it rested on a runway on top of a candy garage and was lighted and operated by electric ity while examining it mrs streeter leaned too far over the revolving blades this caught her coiffure and had it al most torn from iher head before it could be stopped boat hfroine life saver city of kalamazoo crashes into clark street bridge the lake excursion steamer city of kala mazoo was seriously damaged yesterday when owing to the blocking of a reverse lever in the engine room the boat crashed into the clark street bridge five hundred passengers frightened by the crash and panic-stricken rushed for the companion ways and crowded and pushed their way on deck women were saved from serious i injury through the heroism of mrs esther exliue suo7 prairie avenue and the^erew mrs _ _ line was one of the first to reach the deck and finding no immediate danger ran back into the stateroom corridors and assisted in allaying the fears of others tech - student drowns armour institute man sinks in i_ht of companions h w valentiue son of mr . and . mrs george valentine 1540 sixty-sixth place a freshman at armour technical school was drowned iu the menominee river near mari nette wis friday the father left yes terday to bring back the body which was recovered saturday young valentine was a member of a patty of engineering stu dents camped at temene dam in charge of professor alfred e phillips valentine drowned iu thirty feet of water in sight of several of his companions who were swimming in a pool below the dani . ' ' chinese students elope son of chief of celentinl navy jilted for purdue pupil lafayette lud june 11 lee chlng yen a student at purdue university has eloped to china with julia wong a student at indianapolis and a daughter of wong kai kap former chinese imperial commis sioner to the world's fair at st louis mr sab eon of the head of the chinese navy who expected to marry miss wong was jilted victim may be chicagoan the police are seeking to identify the body of a man believed to have been a chlcagoan killed ln corliss wis by a train a card bearing the name deri ng i :"> xorth harding avenue Chicago was found ln the clothing brodie duke weds eloping school girl glad our troubles are all over says fourth bride of tobacco magnate aged 62 relatives are eluded wedding dress made by the girl herself in school her .â€¢ plans kept secret washixgtox d c june 11.-foiled in his effort to marry miss wylanta kos chelle here yesterday brodie l duke the tobacco magnate sixty-two years old and the young school miss slipped away to camden n j early this morning where the knot was tied by justice of the peace frank garrison mr and mrs duke arrived back in washington late this afternoon and are quartered to-night at the abbott house they will leave for the south to-morrow colonel william haskell personal friend of duke first broke the news of marriage xo 4 on the list of the tobacco's man's matrimonial adventures in accomplishing which he outwitted the relatives who were alleged to be en route here to prevent it j b walker duke's secretary who ar rived here this morning in search of fcls chief confirmed the news and later dnke himself admitted it with a happy smile we are married sure enough he de clared to a newspaper reporter who inter cepted him as he was entering the home of colonel haskell at 211 north capitol street with his blushing bride . highly elated at success duke seemed highly elated over the fact that he hÂ»4 . eluded his pursuers his bride clung to him tremblingly but re fused to talk she was still wearing her wedding gown a dark green traveling suit surmounted by a big black picture hat after the call on colonel haskell mr and mrs duke took a taxicab ride to the g street house where she received the congratulations of her friends and many of her fellow students duke and his bride immediately went to colonel haskell's residence in xorth capitol street which is a keeley institute at first mr duke denied himself to all callers but later granted an interview to a reporter the party which included colonel and mrs haskell and mr and mrs duke were sitting iu the institute office ' what do'yoii mean by hounding me like this inquired the tobacco magnate as suming a threatening attitude i am tired of having the newspapers pursuing me all around the country , are you married he was asked admits new jersey marriage none of your business but i have no objections to saying that we are married . it was learned yesterday that mrs duke made her own wedding dress which she was still wearing this evening with a pro fusion of diamonds mr duke was also adorned with several costly gems at the haskell residence mrs duke while taking little part in the interview said yes we are married and i am glad all our troubles are over p j t u s envoy hunts mrs charlton's slayers lake is dragged for trunk victim's husband two american women murdered in italy under strangely similar cir cumstances at the tap is mrs scott castle charlton whose body was found in a trunk floating in lake c'omo on friday she is shoicn in a stage costume below is miss estelle reid whose nude body was found on the beach near naples a few weeks ago ira n morris to stage herod here for charity Chicago packer will study role with william faversham and give three performances special cable to the examiner london june 11 ira x morris a Chicago packer who with his family is exepected soon to arrive iu england will it is learned arrange here to produce herod three nights in Chicago next fall in the interest of charity he has leased the villa of c arthur pearson in surrey this is ten miles from william faversham's summer home mr faversham is going to allow mr morris to use all his scenery and costumes as well as his own stage crew and stage manager lionel belmore for the packer's experiment ln amateur drama mr morris will impersonate herod mr faversham's role the other parts will be taken by Chicago amateurs the pro ceeds will go to the maternity hospital of chicngo of which mr morris is patron the three performances will be given in october at the garrick theater Chicago during the summer mr morris and his family with mr faversham and his wife will motor through italy mr faversham will give mr morris full details of the herod production mrs dynes is recovering mrs owen william dynes who was in jured friday when the horse she was driv ing ran away in recovering hamilton flies in rain and stiff gale most amazing feat in history of aviation accomplished and storm is conquered new york june 11.-through wind rain mist and storm charles k hamilton the amazing little aviator late this after noon flew continuously for one hour six minutes and fifteen seconds circling over governor's island the upper bay butter milk channel skirting jersey city com nrtraipaw ellis island bedloe's island and south brooklyn . not even hamilton's most intimate friends anticipated that he would attempt to fly this afternoon the rain fitfully pelted the region around governor's is land from early morning from the lower ing leaden skies a northeaster blew un ceasingly iti gusty gales - undauuted by the weather be jumped his plane into the air shortly after 6 o'jdock swooping around the confines of the island three times he turned such sharp corners at such ajnazing angles that glenn h curtis who was present grew alarmed speeding at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour he tilted the aeroplane sideways still turning a wide arc while driving the racing aeroplane far out over the river spying here a busy little tug he deter mined to appraise the skipper of his presence . turning his front planes down he swung his rudder around simultaniously nnd came ewooping down on the unsuspecting tug like a huge hawk the skipper threw all ethics of the marine highways to the wind and began backing towards the south brooklyn side of the channel at the same time vociferously shouting his protest wit hsharp little squeals from his whistle but when hamilton had brought his aero plane within five feet of the top of the tug be suddenly swung up into the air again on one of bis famous switchback glides round and round he continued swooping gliding scattering a group of reporters on the far end of the field making acute turns that seemed about to dash him to a horrible death . . it was the most amazlug exhibition of control under all ordinary weather condi tions that has ever been seen 1,000 firms in trust suits way lan to bring action for fall . are to file affidavits v state's attorney wayman was authorized yesterday by attorney general stead to commence suits against nearly 1,000 cor porations of cook county for violating the trust act of 1891 by falling to file an affi davit with the secretary of state stating they are not affiliated with any po trust agreement combination federation under standing or partnership to fix prices the law fixes a fine of 50 for each dav after the date let in the filing of the affidavits she threatened spouse with death says russian italian tragedy is blamed on at least two persons weight of burden ' being more than one could carry american consul at milan in structed by state depart ment sets cleverest de tectives in italy at work boatmen say porter charlton asked where water was deepest arrested russian's stories are contradicted special cable to the examiner milan june 11 circumstances in con nection with tha death of mrs mary crittendon scott castle charlton hava convinced the police that the slayer mult have had assistance in disposing of tha body and their efforts are now directad toward the development ot evidence that will convict two men with the crime the trunk in which the woman's body was found was so heavy that it could not , possibly have been hÃŸndled by one man j and certainly not bv one iu the weakened i physical condition of young charlton who has disappeared as if the earth had swallowed him united states consul cnghy stationed at milan received cabled instructions from the state department at washington to day to do all possible to clear up the tnys tery surrounding the death of mrs charl ton and the disappearance of her husband mr caghy has engaged several of the host detectives in italy to search for the miss ing man test proves two in crime an experiment was made by the police to-day with the trunk in which the body was found it was filled with material weighing exactly the same as the bod and papers and stuff found in it one husky man used to the carrying of trunks made an effort to carry it to the lake and had to admit that the task was greater than he could perform this fact alone has convinced the pollea that at least two men were concerned in disposing of the body if not iu the murder whether charltou and his wife were sial7 and their bodies both disposed of by th murderers is not known any theory in this regard the police suj must remain as one of the plausible one until the missing charlton is found dea or alive if alive they say he is no longer in italy as he had ample time m escape if dead they believe his body wh be discovered perhaps in the lake with that idea in view the authority and fishermen are dragging the lake ln tiÂ»4 neighborhood of the place where the trunk and its contents were brought to t surface by the nets of the fishermen suffocation causes death the post-mortem examination coudnctaa to-day under direction of the king's pro curator showed that although there wer seven wounds on the head evidently caused by blows of a cltt'b or other dull weapon and a fracture of the nasal hone cause by an eighth blow which had disfigured tha features none of these wounds was suffi cient to have caused death and that tha woman had undoubtedly died of suffocation after being placed in the trunk it is also announced that the doctors discovered cer tain physical abnormalities which they re fuse to discuss the effot of the police to track porter charlton the woman's youthful husband have been fruitless it is reported that lie was seen yesterday dining at a restaurant at comasco â– every american who has short hair and a smooth face is being shadowed by tha police the result la that false clews art frequent asks about water's depth boatmen have stated to the police that porter charlton asked fishermen where tha lake was deepest and the latter pointed out the locality where the trunk containing tha body was found tha russian cons'tantin spolatoff who rented the villa to the couple and who has been arrested in connection with the case says that the last time he saw portev charlton was on monday of this week he added that mrs charlton was a writer and that she had lent him two of her books he says he had vnown charlton only a fortnight and charlton had not taken bird into his confidence charlton's means ha says were very limited once he tramped afoot from como to frankfort germany seeking employment ln the american bank there but waa dis appointed and returned to como this statement however is contradicted by many people who know c_arlto may

Chicago examiner sunday Chicago june 12 1910 sunday f this edition consists of m vlji'it i news 7 drama fe'iv iwlh 2 foreign b want aus Â£Â»*\| fvij news poi-ii.aritv k Â»â€¢ f 53 s automobiles contest _*, 71 v*x 4 sporting 9 reae estate v j v 1 i 0 city life markets }â– â€¢ 'â– # v â€ž society financial lw *__ 6 editorial 10 magazine jwf 3iusic li comic l^j registered in o s patent office price five cents wgl Chicago and vicinity partiy a w cloudy sunday monday fair with %- j v 1 rising temperature light variable j'uj i â€¢ nt i winds aw vol x no 50 a m pinchot assails tariff as fruit of business in politics intended as means to raise wages it has become tool to lift cost of living â– a snake we must kill Â» so he terms alliance of inter ests with lawmakers in speech at st paul st pat7i minn june 11 congress was attacked as a tool of the industrial interests a body which had sold out to corporations and in turn hound over th people and their resources to monopolistic control by gilford rinohot in a speech be fore the st paul roosevelt club to-night the tariff as attacked as the means â€¢ taken to bind the people and hand them over to the corporations tinder the cry of promoting national protection mr pinchot said in part the conservation issue is a moral is sue and the heart of it is this for whose benefit shall our natural resources lie conserved for the benefit of us all or for the use and profit of the few all monopoly rests on the unregulated control of natural resources and natural nd â€¢ vantages and such control by the special interests is impossible without the help of lcs the alliance between business politics is ihe most dangerous thing ir political life it is the snake that iust kill defence in congress lost cause the special interests are in poll we as a nation have lost confidence jngress this is a serious statement jke but it is true it does not apply turse to the men who reallv repre their constituents and who are mak o fine a tight for the conservation of overnment as soon as these men won their battle and consolidated victory confidence in congress will t in the meantime the people of the i states believe that as a whole the ; and the house no longer represent iters by whom they were elected but pecial interests by whom they are illed they believe so because they so often seen congress reject what wple desire and do instead what the sts demand and of this there could better illusti tion than the tariff e tariff under the policy of protee was originally a means to raise the f wages it has been made a tool to | se the cost of living the wool i ale professing to protect the wool-j r is found to result in sacrificing r and consumer alike to oue of the rapacious of trusts e cotton cloth schedule was increased e face of the uncontradicted public lony of the manufacturers themselves t ought to remain unchanged e steel interests by a trick secured idefensible increase in the tariff on ural steel * ar trust a thief yet protected ie sugar trust stole from the govern like a petty thief yet congress by s of a dishonest schedule continues oteet it in bleeding the public ho is to blame because representa of the people are so commonly led to y their trusts we all are we who not taken the trouble to resent and in end to the knavery we knew was on the brand of politics served Â» us by the professional politician has been composed largely of hot meals ie interests and hot air for the people ve have all known it ie of the most significant facts of the is that the professional politicians ir to be wholly unaware of the great i change which has come over politl linking in the last decade they fail i that the political dogmas the politi logans and the political methods of last generation have lost their po*w sr that our people have come at last age of politics by the eternal rules of and wrong erests must get out ie overshadowing question before the lean people to-dÂ»y is this shall the n govern itself or shall the interests this country the one great political nd underlying all others giving mean ing to all others is this the special inter ests must got out of politics the old style leaders seeking to switch public attentlou av.-ay from this one absorbing and over whelming issue are pitifully ridiculous and out of date to trj to divert the march ot an aroused public conscience from this l'ighteot:s inevitable conflict by means of obsolete political catchwords is like trying to dam the mississippi with dead leaves to drive the special interests out of poli tics is n vast undertaking for iu politics lies their strength if they resist as doubt less thev will it will call for nerve endur ance and sacrifice ou the part of the peo ple it will lie no child's play for the power of privilege is great but the power of our people is greater still and their steadfastness is equal to the need the task is a tremendous one with in the de mands it will make and the rewards it will bring it must be undertaken s.iberly car ried out firmly and justly and relentlessly followed to the very end two things alone can bring success the first is hon esty in public men without which no pop ular government cau long succeed the mond is complete publicity of all tho affairs in which the public has an interest such as the business cf corporations and political expenses during campaigns and be tween them the struggle will be bitter and long but it will be well worth all it 111 cost for self-government is at stake f â– adeline genee adeline genee weds isitt dukes adviser _ _ queen mother alexandra sends diamond brooch as pres ent to the bride london june 11 adeline genee the dancer who returned only recently from her second tour of america was married at all saints church margaret street to day to frank s x isitt legal adviser to the duke of newcastle the rev m r carpenter rector of all saints officiated the duke gave the bride away the nuptials were witnessed by many persons including some well known in so ciety and prominent members of the theat rical profession the queen mother alexandra sent the bride a diamond brooch gift from play company there were many gifts some of them from the united states the silver star company sent a case of fourteen large sil ver dishes and the members of the dancer's j company who accompanied her from lon don on her last tour contributed a four foot mirror framed in massive silver mrs halley fiske gave a table service of cut glass and marc klaw a case of tif 1 fany liquor glasses christine xllssou the bridegroom's godmother a diamond and emerald scarfpin the dowager duchess of newcastle a massive coffee service and the duchess of somerset an antique gold box mr isitt has been a romantic wooer he is middle aged and spectacled and as at torney the interest of many titled clients were intrusted to him he subordinated them all to the sprightly dancer ttud for three years devoted himself to her followed her to america in london be attended â– every perform 1 ance at which she appeared during longj engagements and when she went to the united states he let his law practice drop to follow her ... ,â– - â€¢ i it has been reported that the duke of newcastle will settle a large sum of money on her so that she may have a fortune in her own right and be independent of the stage one condition of the marriage seems to be that she need not desert the stage un-j less personally so inclined under thatj arrangement mr isitt consented to the renewal of certain contracts she wished to make for the coming season 5th wedding for couple t'liit-a_oau and av ire uivorred four j times and heiuarrieil san francisco june 11 j pay for the weddings and my wife pays for the divorces says - morris - lewis â– a local haberdasher twenty-five years old whose wife has ihe divorce habit four times in six years morris lewis and mrs hannah colin lewis of Chicago have beep married and fonr times the courts of Chicago and the rabbis have divorced them ' now mrs lewis is buying her fifth trous seau getting ready for her fifth honey moon with morris tp follow the wedding in july while the last divorce papers are not four mouths old yet â€¢-â€¢â– â– - kaiser dines chicagoans miss mec'leiiunii kecovering from operation for appendicitis berlin june 11 miss mcclenn an the i singer of Chicago is recovering from an operation for appendicitis among the i kaiser's dinner guests recently were mrs | francis l.eggett of new york and miss i nicoleue zedeler the Chicago violinist i who has been engaged by sousa as his | principal soloist on n world tour which will begin in september miss zedeler - hns been in charge of the musical education of the children of several dlsting u berlin families she has played before the â– imperial family and the kaiser has highly i complimented her meat prices up cent a pound to-morrow general advance scheduled for Chicago new york and other cities new famine threatened scarcity of steers and the high â€¢ cost of fodder are given as reasons wholesale and retail prices of meat in Chicago new york and throughout the ' large cities of the east will be advanced one cent to-morrow according to news made public vesterday through well-in \ formed sources the result will be that thousands of peo ple will be forced to abstain and that scores of retail dealers will be forced to give up business or do business at a loss ' scarcity of good beef steers the fact that corn and cotton seed used for fattening are high and that the packers must main tain their margin of profit are assigned as reasons for the new increase price of beef on hoof rises beef on the hoof went up 2o cents a hundredweight in the Chicago market dur ing the week just ended the packers say this makes an increase in wholesale prices imperative in new york where announcement had been mace of an increase from 12c to 18c a pound in the wholesale price a resump tion of the meat riots of six weeks ago is expected fourteen cent beef will be the highest experienced ln new york's history a dispatch from there last nfght said it will be a cent higher than it was when the great public clamor arose against lis price about six weeks ago when hun dreds of thousands of people all over the united states abstained from its use to such an extent that it fell to 11 cents a pound ruin feared by dealers then the agitation ceased and after about four weeks at the 11-cent rate the trust again started to raise the price to the retail butcher adding a fraction of a cent occasionally so that the increases grew al most imperceptibly nntil this week when the 11-cent figure was again attained butchers say that the raise must drive scores if not hundreds of small new york dealers ont of business airship scatters rats hotel la salle woman guest loses coiffure in candy model a woman's shriek accompanied by flying rats puffs hair pins and the remnants of an automobile veil sent high into the air startled guests sitting in the lobby of the hotel la salle last night the turmoil was occasioned by the curiosity of mrs r l streeter a guest from pittsburg who looked too closely into the mechanism of a model air ship that chef laperrique had made out of candy and set up to be run by electricity it rested on a runway on top of a candy garage and was lighted and operated by electric ity while examining it mrs streeter leaned too far over the revolving blades this caught her coiffure and had it al most torn from iher head before it could be stopped boat hfroine life saver city of kalamazoo crashes into clark street bridge the lake excursion steamer city of kala mazoo was seriously damaged yesterday when owing to the blocking of a reverse lever in the engine room the boat crashed into the clark street bridge five hundred passengers frightened by the crash and panic-stricken rushed for the companion ways and crowded and pushed their way on deck women were saved from serious i injury through the heroism of mrs esther exliue suo7 prairie avenue and the^erew mrs _ _ line was one of the first to reach the deck and finding no immediate danger ran back into the stateroom corridors and assisted in allaying the fears of others tech - student drowns armour institute man sinks in i_ht of companions h w valentiue son of mr . and . mrs george valentine 1540 sixty-sixth place a freshman at armour technical school was drowned iu the menominee river near mari nette wis friday the father left yes terday to bring back the body which was recovered saturday young valentine was a member of a patty of engineering stu dents camped at temene dam in charge of professor alfred e phillips valentine drowned iu thirty feet of water in sight of several of his companions who were swimming in a pool below the dani . ' ' chinese students elope son of chief of celentinl navy jilted for purdue pupil lafayette lud june 11 lee chlng yen a student at purdue university has eloped to china with julia wong a student at indianapolis and a daughter of wong kai kap former chinese imperial commis sioner to the world's fair at st louis mr sab eon of the head of the chinese navy who expected to marry miss wong was jilted victim may be chicagoan the police are seeking to identify the body of a man believed to have been a chlcagoan killed ln corliss wis by a train a card bearing the name deri ng i :"> xorth harding avenue Chicago was found ln the clothing brodie duke weds eloping school girl glad our troubles are all over says fourth bride of tobacco magnate aged 62 relatives are eluded wedding dress made by the girl herself in school her .â€¢ plans kept secret washixgtox d c june 11.-foiled in his effort to marry miss wylanta kos chelle here yesterday brodie l duke the tobacco magnate sixty-two years old and the young school miss slipped away to camden n j early this morning where the knot was tied by justice of the peace frank garrison mr and mrs duke arrived back in washington late this afternoon and are quartered to-night at the abbott house they will leave for the south to-morrow colonel william haskell personal friend of duke first broke the news of marriage xo 4 on the list of the tobacco's man's matrimonial adventures in accomplishing which he outwitted the relatives who were alleged to be en route here to prevent it j b walker duke's secretary who ar rived here this morning in search of fcls chief confirmed the news and later dnke himself admitted it with a happy smile we are married sure enough he de clared to a newspaper reporter who inter cepted him as he was entering the home of colonel haskell at 211 north capitol street with his blushing bride . highly elated at success duke seemed highly elated over the fact that he hÂ»4 . eluded his pursuers his bride clung to him tremblingly but re fused to talk she was still wearing her wedding gown a dark green traveling suit surmounted by a big black picture hat after the call on colonel haskell mr and mrs duke took a taxicab ride to the g street house where she received the congratulations of her friends and many of her fellow students duke and his bride immediately went to colonel haskell's residence in xorth capitol street which is a keeley institute at first mr duke denied himself to all callers but later granted an interview to a reporter the party which included colonel and mrs haskell and mr and mrs duke were sitting iu the institute office ' what do'yoii mean by hounding me like this inquired the tobacco magnate as suming a threatening attitude i am tired of having the newspapers pursuing me all around the country , are you married he was asked admits new jersey marriage none of your business but i have no objections to saying that we are married . it was learned yesterday that mrs duke made her own wedding dress which she was still wearing this evening with a pro fusion of diamonds mr duke was also adorned with several costly gems at the haskell residence mrs duke while taking little part in the interview said yes we are married and i am glad all our troubles are over p j t u s envoy hunts mrs charlton's slayers lake is dragged for trunk victim's husband two american women murdered in italy under strangely similar cir cumstances at the tap is mrs scott castle charlton whose body was found in a trunk floating in lake c'omo on friday she is shoicn in a stage costume below is miss estelle reid whose nude body was found on the beach near naples a few weeks ago ira n morris to stage herod here for charity Chicago packer will study role with william faversham and give three performances special cable to the examiner london june 11 ira x morris a Chicago packer who with his family is exepected soon to arrive iu england will it is learned arrange here to produce herod three nights in Chicago next fall in the interest of charity he has leased the villa of c arthur pearson in surrey this is ten miles from william faversham's summer home mr faversham is going to allow mr morris to use all his scenery and costumes as well as his own stage crew and stage manager lionel belmore for the packer's experiment ln amateur drama mr morris will impersonate herod mr faversham's role the other parts will be taken by Chicago amateurs the pro ceeds will go to the maternity hospital of chicngo of which mr morris is patron the three performances will be given in october at the garrick theater Chicago during the summer mr morris and his family with mr faversham and his wife will motor through italy mr faversham will give mr morris full details of the herod production mrs dynes is recovering mrs owen william dynes who was in jured friday when the horse she was driv ing ran away in recovering hamilton flies in rain and stiff gale most amazing feat in history of aviation accomplished and storm is conquered new york june 11.-through wind rain mist and storm charles k hamilton the amazing little aviator late this after noon flew continuously for one hour six minutes and fifteen seconds circling over governor's island the upper bay butter milk channel skirting jersey city com nrtraipaw ellis island bedloe's island and south brooklyn . not even hamilton's most intimate friends anticipated that he would attempt to fly this afternoon the rain fitfully pelted the region around governor's is land from early morning from the lower ing leaden skies a northeaster blew un ceasingly iti gusty gales - undauuted by the weather be jumped his plane into the air shortly after 6 o'jdock swooping around the confines of the island three times he turned such sharp corners at such ajnazing angles that glenn h curtis who was present grew alarmed speeding at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour he tilted the aeroplane sideways still turning a wide arc while driving the racing aeroplane far out over the river spying here a busy little tug he deter mined to appraise the skipper of his presence . turning his front planes down he swung his rudder around simultaniously nnd came ewooping down on the unsuspecting tug like a huge hawk the skipper threw all ethics of the marine highways to the wind and began backing towards the south brooklyn side of the channel at the same time vociferously shouting his protest wit hsharp little squeals from his whistle but when hamilton had brought his aero plane within five feet of the top of the tug be suddenly swung up into the air again on one of bis famous switchback glides round and round he continued swooping gliding scattering a group of reporters on the far end of the field making acute turns that seemed about to dash him to a horrible death . . it was the most amazlug exhibition of control under all ordinary weather condi tions that has ever been seen 1,000 firms in trust suits way lan to bring action for fall . are to file affidavits v state's attorney wayman was authorized yesterday by attorney general stead to commence suits against nearly 1,000 cor porations of cook county for violating the trust act of 1891 by falling to file an affi davit with the secretary of state stating they are not affiliated with any po trust agreement combination federation under standing or partnership to fix prices the law fixes a fine of 50 for each dav after the date let in the filing of the affidavits she threatened spouse with death says russian italian tragedy is blamed on at least two persons weight of burden ' being more than one could carry american consul at milan in structed by state depart ment sets cleverest de tectives in italy at work boatmen say porter charlton asked where water was deepest arrested russian's stories are contradicted special cable to the examiner milan june 11 circumstances in con nection with tha death of mrs mary crittendon scott castle charlton hava convinced the police that the slayer mult have had assistance in disposing of tha body and their efforts are now directad toward the development ot evidence that will convict two men with the crime the trunk in which the woman's body was found was so heavy that it could not , possibly have been hÃŸndled by one man j and certainly not bv one iu the weakened i physical condition of young charlton who has disappeared as if the earth had swallowed him united states consul cnghy stationed at milan received cabled instructions from the state department at washington to day to do all possible to clear up the tnys tery surrounding the death of mrs charl ton and the disappearance of her husband mr caghy has engaged several of the host detectives in italy to search for the miss ing man test proves two in crime an experiment was made by the police to-day with the trunk in which the body was found it was filled with material weighing exactly the same as the bod and papers and stuff found in it one husky man used to the carrying of trunks made an effort to carry it to the lake and had to admit that the task was greater than he could perform this fact alone has convinced the pollea that at least two men were concerned in disposing of the body if not iu the murder whether charltou and his wife were sial7 and their bodies both disposed of by th murderers is not known any theory in this regard the police suj must remain as one of the plausible one until the missing charlton is found dea or alive if alive they say he is no longer in italy as he had ample time m escape if dead they believe his body wh be discovered perhaps in the lake with that idea in view the authority and fishermen are dragging the lake ln tiÂ»4 neighborhood of the place where the trunk and its contents were brought to t surface by the nets of the fishermen suffocation causes death the post-mortem examination coudnctaa to-day under direction of the king's pro curator showed that although there wer seven wounds on the head evidently caused by blows of a cltt'b or other dull weapon and a fracture of the nasal hone cause by an eighth blow which had disfigured tha features none of these wounds was suffi cient to have caused death and that tha woman had undoubtedly died of suffocation after being placed in the trunk it is also announced that the doctors discovered cer tain physical abnormalities which they re fuse to discuss the effot of the police to track porter charlton the woman's youthful husband have been fruitless it is reported that lie was seen yesterday dining at a restaurant at comasco â– every american who has short hair and a smooth face is being shadowed by tha police the result la that false clews art frequent asks about water's depth boatmen have stated to the police that porter charlton asked fishermen where tha lake was deepest and the latter pointed out the locality where the trunk containing tha body was found tha russian cons'tantin spolatoff who rented the villa to the couple and who has been arrested in connection with the case says that the last time he saw portev charlton was on monday of this week he added that mrs charlton was a writer and that she had lent him two of her books he says he had vnown charlton only a fortnight and charlton had not taken bird into his confidence charlton's means ha says were very limited once he tramped afoot from como to frankfort germany seeking employment ln the american bank there but waa dis appointed and returned to como this statement however is contradicted by many people who know c_arlto may